Language non-selective activation of orthography during spoken word processing in Hindi–English...
Mishra, Ramesh; Singh, Niharika
2013-03-20 00:00:00
Previous psycholinguistic studies have shown that bilinguals activate lexical items of both the languages during auditory and visual word processing. In this study we examined if Hindi–English bilinguals activate the orthographic forms of phonological neighbors of translation equivalents of the non target language while listening to words either in L1 or L2. We tracked participant’s eye movements as they looked at an array of written words that contained a phonological neighbor of the translation equivalent of a simultaneously presented spoken word. Participants quickly oriented their visual attention towards the phonological neighbor of the translation equivalent compared to the distractors, suggesting an activation of the spelling of the non-target lexicon via translation leading to further spreading activation of related words. Further, this parallel activation of the non target lexicon was seen in both L1–L2 and L2–L1 direction. These results suggest that different bilinguals can automatically activate the orthographic forms of the non-target lexicon via translation equivalents even when the languages in question do not share cognates and use different scripts.
http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.pngReading and WritingSpringer Journalshttp://www.deepdyve.com/lp/springer-journals/language-non-selective-activation-of-orthography-during-spoken-word-Y7b32nkb0K

Abstract

Previous psycholinguistic studies have shown that bilinguals activate lexical items of both the languages during auditory and visual word processing. In this study we examined if Hindi–English bilinguals activate the orthographic forms of phonological neighbors of translation equivalents of the non target language while listening to words either in L1 or L2. We tracked participant’s eye movements as they looked at an array of written words that contained a phonological neighbor of the translation equivalent of a simultaneously presented spoken word. Participants quickly oriented their visual attention towards the phonological neighbor of the translation equivalent compared to the distractors, suggesting an activation of the spelling of the non-target lexicon via translation leading to further spreading activation of related words. Further, this parallel activation of the non target lexicon was seen in both L1–L2 and L2–L1 direction. These results suggest that different bilinguals can automatically activate the orthographic forms of the non-target lexicon via translation equivalents even when the languages in question do not share cognates and use different scripts.

Journal

Reading and Writing
– Springer Journals

Published: Mar 20, 2013

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References

Tracking the time course of spoken word recognition using eye movements: Evidence for continuous mapping models

Allopenna, PD; Magnuson, JS; Tanenhaus, MK

Language can mediate eye movement control within 100 millisecond regardless of whether there is anything to move eye to